What Do I Mean by SEO?

Let’s first be clear about something. I have a love/hate relationship with the term “SEO”. You’ll run across 2 major usages :

SEO can refer to the process of optimizing a website so that it ranks well in search engines for target terms, or

SEO can refer to the individual (“Mike is an SEO”) or company (“Dewey, Cheatem & Howe is an SEO”) you might hire to elevate your search rankings.

So, with your business website, you might use SEO strategies to help improve your rankings and traffic, or you might hire an SEO. Either way, it could be a mistake.

Wait, Don’t You TEACH SEO to Business Owners & Marketing People?

Yes and no.

Since approximately 2006, we’ve trained business owners and small business teams to leverage the web to deliver valuable content and thereby achieve better results when it comes to search engine rankings and strategies. So… if that’s what you mean, then yes we do.

On the other hand, I’ve personally long believed that most of the techniques I’m about to mention were a bad idea. And most SEOs sell these services as their bread and butter. So, in our training, we’ve consistently taught (and demonstrated) strategies and techniques that will get you long-term winning search results with a completely different (safe) approach.

Thus the “love/hate relationship” I mentioned earlier.

Yes, you need to have a plan that gets you good solid search engine rankings on terms that your future customers may use in search. (There’s an important key, right there!)

But no, you don’t need to try to “game” Google into showing your site above your competitor’s site.

Today, Neil Patel published a post called “5 SEO Techniques You Should Stop Using Immediately.” It’s solid content (as usual) from Neil, and it got me thinking about why we’ve consistently advised our clients against tactics that even felt like they were aimed at “gaming” Google’s results.

More on that in a sec. First, here are the 5 techniques Neil mentioned:

It’s worth taking your time to read his post, but I’ll just add a couple of comments here based upon our own experience helping hundreds of small businesses get better results online.

With respect to “Spammy Guest Blogging,” we actually tested this early on. We built a website especially for people who went through our training so that they could learn WordPress (the tool every small business needs to be using on the web) and publish some of their best content on it.

Since we taught them how to use “anchor text links” in our training, we encouraged them to create links back to their own sites using “Optimized Anchors.”

We took that site down a long time ago.

Here’s why we took it down. First of all, we realized that it had absolutely no rhyme or reason to it. You might have seen a post about a jewelry store right below one about an optometrist, which was below one about different types of stanchions, which was below one about wholesale picture frames. The only thing remotely cohesive about the site was that I knew all of the authors.

So… the site had no “theme” that Google could identify. At first, this wasn’t a problem. In fact, the posts (and the links) were really helpful—both because they gave our students and clients a chance to showcase their work to one another and because the site itself passed some benefit to their individual websites via the links.

However, over time, Google has gotten better and better about identifying efforts like this when they seem to be aimed at manipulating their search results. So we took it down. The training benefit can be achieved other ways.

If you’re interested in learning just how serious Google has gotten about identifying “guest posts” that are actually spammy in nature, check out what Rand Fishkin rightly called “One of the Scariest Google Penalties I’ve Seen”:

This is certainly one of the scariest & most aggressive penalties I've ever heard of Google applying: http://t.co/HQ47eZekYx

Secondly, while I’m still a fan of both “guest blogging” and “anchor text links,” there’s an important piece of the puzzle that all of our students and clients have heard me talk about ad nauseum:

Every effort at publishing content and “getting links” must be passed through this simple filter: Does it deliver value to our target audience? If not, don’t do it. Period.

Ultimately, the posts about stanchions and picture frames and optometry didn’t serve our market. The experience gained was valuable, yes. But as I mentioned, that can be done other ways. Ultimately, the content and links only benefited our students (at least at first) and us—not the target audience. So down came the site.

Which brings me to the other techniques that Neil mentioned…

The Value & Importance of Inbound Links

Creating links has long been the “low hanging fruit” for SEOs. Some of them literally did nothing else for clients other than place links to their websites.

And we have always advised against doing this, except in very narrow cases.

(And since I know you’re going to ask: in every one of those cases, the most important component every small business needs online already existed. What is that component? Freshly updated, valuable content being published via WordPress on a regular basis.)

Links have always been important for websites. My hunch is that they always will be… as long as Google rules the world, anyway. Larry and Sergey built their business, its early patents, and the world’s most valuable search engine around their doctoral thesis… which introduced the idea of “PageRank”… which used links as its primary signal for determining relevance and quality.

But of course, as Google grew to take over the search market, this launched the game that I often compare to the radar/radar detector business. The cops use radar to catch speeders. Speeders get better radar detectors. And so on.

Google (and every other search engine) has one simple goal: provide the searcher with the most relevant, highest quality search results possible.

Thus, every search engine will reward sites that provide valuable, relevant content to the right audiences.

I have long insisted that ranking for rankings sake does not ultimately server a business’s purposes well. Rankings that put their websites in front of their best customersdo serve their purposes well. After all, why get a ton of traffic from people who never should or never will buy from you?

Most small businesses can’t accommodate more than a few high quality prospects every day anyway. Some can. And sure… e-commerce websites can theoretically check out as many buyers as want to whip out their credit cards on a given day. But as we proved with one of our biggest clients, if you increase sales rapidly enough, you can break every system in the business… and ultimately bury it. It’s called “the success you never want.”

So…. we’ve trained our students (and helped our clients) obtain valuable links. But we’ve done this organically. And often, the links came because our clients created valuable content that other sites wanted to link to… which means that they are exactly the kinds of sites (and links) that Google has always wanted to reward.

Can you overdo the links? Yep. And you can overdo the anchor text. Some links should have anchor text. Brand anchor text is virtually always good. But ultimately anchor text should “look right” to the reader when they see it. Google hasn’t always been able to detect it when this wasn’t the case. They still can’t nail it every time. But they’ve been getting better and better at it all along.

The same thing is true with “keywords” in your content. The keywords need to be there. But they need to be there because they make sense to a reader. And sure—writers can improve the way that they make use of keywords (most need some training along these lines), but at the end of the day, if keywords are used too often, the content doesn’t “feel” right to the reader.

So… if you’re doing any of these things too much (and if you have to stop and ask yourself, you actually just might be!), stop it.

And certainly, if you’re paying someone to do these things for you, quit! (For the record, there are still plenty of conscientious, high quality SEOs who are ethical and valuable. Those people have already stopped doing this stuff. And you should pay them if you can find one and can afford it.)

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About the Author

David G. Johnson is Co-Founder and Growth Engineer at Grow The Dream, where he advises and trains business owners, entrepreneurs, and small business teams on revenue growth strategies. You can also find him co-hosting the Grow The Dream Show. »» Full Bio